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Statement
by Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Ahmed Qurei on meeting with Dr.
Condoleeza Rice
Berlin,
Germany - 17 May 2004 New York, 4 May 2004
I, on behalf of the
Palestinian Authority, very much appreciated the opportunity to meet with US
National Security Advisor, Dr. Condoleeza Rice. Our meeting was a welcome
opportunity for Palestinians and Americans to discuss the means by which to
reinvigorate the peace process and achieve our shared vision of a viable and
free Palestinian state.
During the meeting, I
expressed the continued commitment of the Palestinian Authority (PA) to the Road
Map as a path for ending Israel's 37-year military occupation. We discussed the
steps that must be taken by all parties to implement the Road Map, including
respect for law, parallel actions by both Israel and Palestinians and the strong
role of third parties to monitor and ensure compliance with the Road Map. In
addition to outlining the PA's plan to hold elections, I also outlined the steps
that the PA has taken and will continue to take to strengthen its capacity to
more effectively ensure public security. The Palestinian Authority has requested
the assistance of the United States on this matter.
I note, however, that
peace and security for Palestinians and Israelis can only be achieved of Israel
is committed to respecting human rights and international law. Since I have
assumed office, Israel has taken a number of unlawful measures in the name of
"security" that bring only insecurity and violence: Israel has killed
336 Palestinians, including 47 children (an average of 56 Palestinians per
month); has erected over 700 barriers in the Occupied West Bank, preventing
Palestinians from reaching their jobs, schools and hospitals and has taken over
Palestinian homes to expand illegal Israeli settlements. In the last 17 days
alone, Israel has made more than 2,100 Palestinian refugees homeless. These
actions not only fuel extremism but they seriously undermine those who seek a
peaceful resolution to Israel's military occupation. I call on the United States
to pressure Israel to stop its attacks on Palestinians and to end its policy of
home demolitions.
The Palestinian Authority
welcomes the Gaza Disengagement Plan, but only to the extent that the evacuation
represents the first step to ending Israel's occupation of all of the Occupied
Palestinian Territory. Consequently, the Israeli government would be ill advised
to believe that in exchange for withdrawing from a few settlements in Gaza that
it will be entitled to hold onto large settlements in the West Bank. Any effort
at unilaterally imposing a solution on the Palestinians will fail. Bilateral
negotiations are the only way to end this conflict.
Finally, I am encouraged
by recent Quartet statements and the letter by President Bush which reaffirm
that any final settlement must be negotiated and not imposed. The Palestinians
are ready to resume negotiations with Israel to end the now 37-year military
occupation and establish a Palestinian state that is side by side in peace with
Israel.
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